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Eat the Document: A Novel
Eat the Document: A Novel
Eat the Document: A Novel
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Eat the Document: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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From the National Book Award nominated author of Innocents and Others and Wayward, a bold and moving novel that follows a fugitive radical from the 1970s who has lived in hiding for twenty-five years and explores themes of idealism, passion, sacrifice, and the cost of living a secret.

In the heyday of the 1970s underground, Bobby DeSoto and Mary Whittaker—passionate, idealistic, and in love —organize a series of radical protests against the Vietnam War. When one action goes wrong, the course of their lives is forever changed. The two must erase their past, forge new identities, and never see each other again.

Now it is the 1990s. Mary lives in the suburbs with her fifteen-year-old son, who spends hours immersed in the music of his mother's generation. She has no idea where Bobby is, whether he is alive or dead.

Shifting between the protests in the 1970s and the consequences of those choices in the 1990s, Dana Spiotta deftly explores the connection between the two eras—their language, technology, music, and activism. Dana Spiotta, "wonderfully observant and wonderfully gifted...with an uncanny feel for the absurdities and sadness of contemporary life" (The New York Times), has written a character-driven, brilliant, and riveting portrait of two eras and a revelatory novel about the culture of rebellion, with particular resonance now.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherScribner
Release dateFeb 21, 2006
ISBN9780743288996
Eat the Document: A Novel
Author

Dana Spiotta

Dana Spiotta is the author of Stone Arabia, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award; Eat the Document, a finalist for the National Book Award; and Lightning Field. Spiotta received the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellow­ship, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, and the Rome Prize for Literature. Her work has been pub­lished by the New Yorker, the New York Times Magazine, Vogue, and the New York Times Book Review. She teaches in the creative writing programme at Syracuse University. In 2017 she was recipient of the John Updike Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

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Rating: 3.5856164821917815 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It's been a long time since a book really touched me. I want to make a pun about bombing my heart, but Eat the Document is way too subtle for that. I am so glad I read Stone Arabia before this because Stone Arabia book feels like a little offshoot of this one. Eat the Document has much more scope and accomplishes so much more. It does kind of feel like Spiotta is purging herself of all her thoughts about the American left. But at its bombed out heart Eat the Document is a love story between Mary and Bobby. Where to go from here? Please take your time Dana and write something better than Dissident Gardens. I listened to the audio and the big reveal would have been wonderful if I didn't already know the plot. Rachael Warren does a great job shifting between decades and voices--not an easy job for a reader. And there is a bunch of music snob fandom BS thrown in too and I love that.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This National Book Award finalist from 2006 largely lives up to its praise. Every paragraph is a small wonder of astute observation expressed in seemingly effortless perfect prose, and the characters are fascinating and well drawn. Much of it is set in Seattle in the late 1990s, and as a resident of Seattle at that time, I can attest that it’s spot on, and it wasn’t hard to identify the named and unnamed Capital Hill landmarks, some of whose names were changed in amusing ways. (The book’s “Shrink Wrap” music store is obviously Cellophane Square, while the 15th Avenue Mall’s Urban Outfitters store becomes “Suburban Guerilla.”) As I read on, though, the book’s underlying tone of sadness became stronger and stronger, and I’m sorry to say it never abated. If you’re made of strong stuff, this uncompromising quality may strike you as the only honest way of developing the book’s plot and themes, and I’ll admit that my wish for a happier resolution is decidedly naïve and uncool. Still, I can’t help feeling that at the end, the book’s incredible character-building--the quality that was its greatest strength in the early chapters--took a back seat to its message about what’s happened to society in general. And at this point, in 2022, I think we’ve all seen enough to have absorbed that message.Speaking of the SF writer Robert Heinlein’s penchant for upfront preachiness in his later works, Heinlein’s contemporary Theodore Sturgeon accused him of having “sold his birthright for a pot of message.” (See note.) Maybe it’s never a good thing when a book shunts its characters aside to make a Statement. And while here it’s done both subtilely and, I think, accurately, I was left with the feeling that I had been duped into thinking that the book was going to be about what happened to the sad, damaged characters I had grown to care about so much. Instead, their story fizzled, and the book ends not with a bang, but with a whimper, taking the same path, as the writer may be trying to say, as did the promise of the idealistic 1960s. (Note) The wordplay is on the story of Jacob and Esau in the King James Bible; it’s a long story, but the KJB tells us that Esau “sold his birthright for a mess of pottage.”
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Well worth the read even though I'm not ranking it as a classic or anything. What happens when underground 60's radicals meet wannabe poseur radicals in the 2000's? Lots of thoughts on what it means to protest.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In 1972, a young woman called Mary (then Freya, then Caroline) goes on the run after involvement in bombing the houses of executives of companies involved in producing munitions for the Vietnam War. The novel alternates between her story and that of a group of people in the 1990s - three in their forties and the rest young people with varying degrees of alienation. So, is this a book about the decline in activism since the 1970s? I can't make my mind up. On the surface, yes - there is some pretty heavy-handed satire on disaffected 1990s youth. But at the same time, the 1970s narrative effectively shows the wide range of approaches to the counter-culture, from the deeply committed and active to the people who were attracted for the lazing around and smoking drugs. In fact, the 1970s storyline is much more interesting - both the way that Mary is affected by having to go on the run (having to discard her identity, and never sure that she has any future) and in the spectrum of how the counter-culture affected different groups of people. The 1990s story, as I said, is mostly heavy parody, but reading parody of something I know almost nothing about feels quite exclusionary! There were a couple of interesting ideas - I liked a thread of conversation about why people choose to dress a certain way: "to remind you of who you want to be", because "you get treated in a certain way and it helps you become what you want to be", or so that "you control what people believe about you". But overall it didn't hang together. Recommended for: someone who believes that kids today just appropriate radical imagery with no understanding of what it really means!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    My sister recommended this book, said it was different and interesting. I thought it had some redeeming qualities such as Mary's life on the run, but the passages about Henry made no sense and I really disliked the music and counter culture bookstore parts. I did not clearly understand the end so I will ponder this but not comment further so as not to spoil for other readers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I picked up this book after reading Hari Kunzru’s My Revolutions. Here, Spiotta tells the story of life underground, rather than focusing on the politics and day to day activities of a Revolutionary cell. And it is more interesting and somehow more relevant. Mary Whittaker is involved in a bombing that has unintended consequences - not the least of which is a life forgone and lived on the run. We follow Mary as she moves from place to place over the years, changing her appearance and name until finally ending up in the Pacific Northwest.Her partner and lover (Bobby Desoto) who we also meet (but only in the present day as Nash Davis) runs a little alternative bookshop in the same area as it turns out (unbeknownst to Mary). Mary has had a son, Jason, who becomes interested in discovering who his mother really is. Many fascinating characters along the way, as well. Only one didn’t work for me - Nash’s benefactor Henry.Spiotta has wonderful insights into her character Mary, especially as related to the life of living a constant lie. Mary re-invents herself a number of times through the years, and it’s here where Spiotta really excels. Her underground status had convoluted all context - the fact that she could change her identity so completely changed the very possibility of engagement, or precluded the possibility of real engagement. She regarded everything and everyone from a distance, both ephemeral and abstract.Much is made in our culture of the ability to start with nothing and become a success - to start a whole new life. To re-invent, the religion of makeover. The ease with which this is possible has a dark underside, which Spiotta muses over Anyone can start a new life, even in a small town. Everyone moves so much these days. You get a divorce, you move and start over. Try it. See how little people ask about you. See how little people listen. Or, more precisely, think about how little you really know about the people you know. Where they were born, for instance. Have you met their parents? Or siblings? There was a time, maybe, when just being new in a town made you seem suspect. Because you were suspect - people didn’t have any way to verify you were who you said you were. And why did you have to leave where you came from? But there is a long history (seldom spoken of in the gloriously amnesiac everyday) in America, and in a democracy, of starting over. It was almost an imperative, wasn’t it? America was founded, of course, by people who invented new lives, who wanted nothing more than to jettison the weight of all that history, all that burden and all that memory of Europe. That was one form of freedom. Freedom from memory and history and accounting. moves so much these days.She also does some good writing regarding Josh’s fascination with his parents’ generation music and culture. All the while subtly skewering what it all has wrought. A sly book, an accomplished book. An ultimately satisfying book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Dana Spiotta's novel, Eat The Document, is an edgey expose` on the American countercultures of the early 70s and late 90s. The story revolves around Mary Whittiker and Bobby Desoto, two idealistic and passionate characters who get caught up in the radical Vietnam protests of their time. Told from multiple points of view and leaping back and forth in time from the heady days of the early 70s to the angst driven world of the late 90s, the novel uncovers Mary and Bobby's rebellion gone awry and the reinvention of their lives as they go underground.Spiotta excels in the development of her female characters and portraying the intricacies of relationships and how those complexities shape one's decisions.I must admit to being somewhat impatient with Spiotta's exploration of some of her male characters - especially Jason, who I found annoying and overwritten. Jason perhaps encapsulates the angst of youth, but his intellectualizing and preachiness reminded me he was a character in a story rather than bringing him to life on the page.Spiotta laces her novel with a subtle and sarcastic humor which saves it from becoming just another overly serious interpretation of the Vietnam years and the rebellion of America's youth.Eat The Document is a smart, witty novel that falls just shy of being very good.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The strength of this book is the juxtaposition of 70s and 90s sensibilities, culture, fashion, etc. Meant to be ironic in many ways, I found it somewhat flat.After buying all the nominees for the National Book Award for this year, I decided to read it first, since it looked like it would go quickly, and yep, I was right.I hope this one does not win.I am really getting tired of the 70s Radical Goes Underground genre. In the last year, this is at least the third novel I've read. Backwards Facing Man, I forget who wrote that one, but it was some guy who was in manufacturing forever and then quit and started to write, so that was kind of cool.American Woman, by Susan Choi, which even though I'm vaguely interested in Patty Hearst just bored me to death.There's always that Philip Roth one, I forget which, probably American Pastoral, but that wasn't written all *that* recently and it's Roth so you know I give it a pass.I think Eat The Document was nominated because unlike last year the committee had no other female writers nominated. Last year it was a big fuss because it was ONLY female writers and the nominees were dominated by first novels. That seemed a little weird and the committee really came under fire.

Book preview

Eat the Document - Dana Spiotta

PART ONE

1972

By Heart

IT IS EASY for a life to become unblessed.

Mary, in particular, understood this. Her mistakes—and they were legion—were not lost on her. She knew all about the undoing of a life: take away, first of all, your people. Your family. Your lover. That was the hardest part of it. Then put yourself somewhere unfamiliar, where (how did it go?) you are a complete unknown. Where you possess nothing. Okay, then—this was the strangest part—take away your history, every last bit of it.

What else?

She discovered, despite what people may imagine, having nothing to lose is a lot like having nothing. (But there was something to lose, even at this point, something huge to lose, and that was why this unknown, homeless state never resembled freedom.)

The unnerving, surprisingly creepy and unpleasantly psychedelic part—you lose your name.

Mary finally sat on a bed in a motel room that very first night after she had taken a breathless train ride under darkening skies and through increasingly unfamiliar landscape. Despite her anxiety she still felt lulled by the tracks clicking at intervals beneath the train; an odd calm descended for whole minutes in a row until the train pulled into another station and she waited for someone to come over to her, finger-pointing, some unbending and unsmiling official. In between these moments of near calm and all the other moments, she practiced appearing normal. Only when she tried to move could you notice how shaky she was. That really undid her, her visible unsteadiness. She tried not to move.

Five state borders, and then she was handing over the cash for the room—anonymous, cell-like, quiet. She clutched her receipt in her hand, stared at it, September 15, 1972, and thought, This is the first day of it. Room Twelve, the first place of it.

Even then, behind a chain lock in the middle of nowhere, she was double-checking doors and closing curtains. Showers were impossible; she half-expected the door of the bathroom to push in as she stood there unaware and naked. Instead of sleeping she lay on the covers, facing the door, ready to move. Showers and bed, nakedness and sleep—she felt certain that was how it would happen, she could visualize it happening. She saw it in slow motion, she saw it silently, and then she saw it quickly, in double time, with crashes and splintered glass. Haven’t you seen the photos of Fred Hampton’s mattress? She certainly had seen the photos of Fred Hampton’s mattress. They’d all seen them. She couldn’t remember if the body was still in the bed in the photos, but she definitely remembered the bed itself: half stripped of sheets, the dinge stripe and seam of the mattress exposed and seeped with stains. All of it captured in the lurid black-and-white Weegee style that seemed to underline the blood-soak and the bedclothes in grabbed-at disarray. She imagined the bunching of sheets in the last seconds, perhaps to protect the unblessed person on the bed. Grabbed and bunched not against gunfire, of course, but against his terrible, final nakedness.

Cheryl, she said aloud. No, never. Orange soda. Natalie. You had to say them aloud, get your mouth to shape the sound and push breath through it. Every name sounded queer when she did this. Sylvia. A movie-star name, too fake sounding. Too unusual. People might actually hear it. Notice it, ask about it. Agnes. Too old. Mary, she said very quietly. But that was her real name, or her original name. She just needed to say it.

She sat on the edge of the bed, atop a beige chenille bedspread with frays and loose threads, in her terry-cloth bathrobe, which she’d somehow thought to buy when she got her other supplies earlier in the afternoon. She had imagined a bath as bringing some relief, and the sink into the robe afterward seemed important. She did just that, soaked in the tub after wiping it clean. Eyes trained on the open door of the bathroom, and careful not to splash, she strained to determine the origins of every sound she heard. She shaved her legs and scrubbed her hands with a small nailbrush, also purchased that day. She flossed her teeth and brushed her tongue with her new toothbrush. She tended to the usual grooming details with unusual attention: she knew instinctively that these details were very closely tied to keeping her sanity, or her wits, anyway. Otherwise she could just freeze up, on the floor, in her dirty jeans, drooling and sobbing until they came and got her. Dirt was linked to inertia. Cleanliness, particularly personal cleanliness, was an assertion against madness. It was a declaration of control. You might be in the midst of chaos, terrified, but the ritual of your self-tending radiated from you and protected you. That was where Mary figured a lot of people got it wrong. Slovenliness might be rebellious, but it was never liberating. In fact, she felt certain that slovenly and sloppy attention to personal hygiene surrendered you to everything outside you, all the things not of you trying to get in.

The TV on low, she looked but barely watched, hugging her knees toward her. Unpolished clean nails, uniform and smooth. Legs shaven and scented with baby oil, which looked greasy but smelled powdery and familiar. She inhaled deeply, resting her face on her knees and drawing her legs closer. She was a tiny ball of a human, wasn’t she? A speck of a being in the middle of a vast, multihighwayed and many-sided country, wasn’t she? Full of generic, anonymous and safe places just like this one.

She thought of famous people’s names, authors’ names, teachers’ names, the names she made up when she was eight for her future babies. Abby, Blythe, Valerie. Vita, Tuesday, Naomi. She put on an oversized T-shirt and clean cotton bikini briefs decorated with large pastel pansies, size 4. She thought of girlfriend names and cheerleader names. Names of flowers and women in novels. She ate peanut butter on white bread and drank orange juice directly from the carton. She was ravenous, very unusual for her. She took a large bite and a big swig, the sweet, pulpy taste mixing into the glutinous, sticky mouthful. She didn’t finish swallowing before taking another huge bite. Maybe I’ll be a fat person in my new life. She started to laugh, and the peanut butter–bread–orange juice clump stuck momentarily in her throat, cutting off her airway. She imagined, indifferently, choking and dying in this motel room. She swallowed and then laughed even harder, out loud. It sounded crazy, her short, sudden laugh against the quiet mono sound of the television. She could hear her breath squeeze in and out of her lungs and throat. She turned up the volume on the television and stared hard at it.

Jim Brown was talking to Dick Cavett. Brown wore a tight white jumpsuit with beige piping and a wide tan leather belt through the high-waisted belt loops. They both sipped something out of oversized mugs, also white, and placed them on a mushroom-shaped white metal table between them. Brown smiled handsomely and kept declaring—with exquisite enunciation—his respect and support for his friend, the president.

A piece of lined paper in a spiral notebook, a ballpoint pen. Karen Black. Mary Jo Kopechne. Joni Mitchell. Martha Mitchell. Joan Baez. Jane Asher. Joan isn’t so bad. Linda McCartney. Joan McCartney. Joan Lennon. Oh, good, sure. Bobby would appreciate that. She almost waited for him to contact her—but she knew he would not, not for a while, anyway. At eleven o’clock she turned the channel to watch the news, tried to see if he, or any of them, had been identified or arrested. Jane Fonda, Phoebe Caulfield, Valerie Solanas. She liked these names. Mustn’t reference her real name in any way. Brigitte, Hannah, Tricia. Just don’t get cute. Lady Bird. Pat. Ha.

You are no longer Mary from the suburbs. You are Freya from the edge, Bobby had said. They sat cross-legged on a handwoven rug Bobby had bought in Spain. She spent many nights getting high kneeling on that rug; she could examine it endlessly. Moorish Möbius patterns took you in dervish circles back to where you started but done in incongruous, rainy European colors—muted greens and yellows—next to imperial, regal and regimental looking banners and shieldlike things. The rug wasn’t authentic, but whoever made it had worked meticulously to evoke something authentic, studied relics of conquerings, exiles and colonies. It clashed and conflicted the way real things often did. It was the most beautiful thing either of them possessed, and they often sat on it, next to their bed, which was just a mattress on the floor with no frame or even box springs. All the kids she knew slept on the floor; it softened the distinction between their bed and the rest of the world. She felt safer, nearer to the ground. What did it mean, a culture where people sit cross-legged on the floor, on beautiful rugs? Were there horizontal and vertical cultures? Was living closer to the earth free and natural, or was it simply meager? Was it good, or better, or just different for someone?

"And what will you call me?" she had asked, leaning her head against his back. He often wore sleeveless undershirts, very thin and slightly ribbed; when she pressed against him he smelled both tangy and sweet. Pot and incense and sweat.

She tried to conjure him, with her eyes closed, in her midnight bed. She thought Bobby looked exotic, handsome not so much in the total as in the details. The closer in she was, the more attractive he became. His skin had a faint yellow-green undertone that was the opposite of ruddy: skin so smooth under her touch that she could feel every tiny rough spot on her own fingers or lips; skin so clear and fine she could see his blood pulse at wrist and temple and neck. And although she wasn’t ever crazy about the random curliness of his long black hair, which grew out rather than down, she adored the silky way the hair slipped through her fingers when she pulled her hand through it, and the tension in his shoulders when she pressed against them, and how in candlelight she would see her white skin—her slender hand, say—against the dark skin of his broad back, and it would catch her off guard always, the contrast between them. She felt then exquisite and even fragile, which she liked. She wasn’t supposed to, but she did. Perhaps because they spent so much time together, and dressed alike and spoke alike—even laughed alike—it was great to in some palpable way be unalike.

Will you call me Mary, at least when we are home, in bed?

Only Freya. And you have to call me Marco. In these sorts of activities you can’t use your real name. Ever. If you want to change your life, first you change your name.

A nom de guerre? Isn’t that sort of ridiculous?

All cultures have naming ceremonies. You have a given name, but then you get a chosen name. It’s part of a transformation to adulthood. They tell you who you are, and then you decide who you are. It’s like getting confirmed, or getting married.

But I didn’t choose that name. You did.

I’m helping you. The first thing we do is make up a new name. A fighting, fearless name.

A Bolshevik name? Mary said, frowning.

It’s a Nordic goddess name. A towering priestess name. A lightning bolt name. A name to live up to.

She closed her eyes and rested against him. Okay.

A name that exudes agitprop. These are always two-syllable names that end in a vowel. Freya, Maya, Silda. Marco, Proto, Demo. If you don’t like that name, come up with another. They never did use those names except in the press communiqués and on the telephone. Now she was choosing another name, its opposite—a hidden, modest, meek name—but truly choosing.

The next morning (was it morning?), when she woke after hardly sleeping, she sat down in the one chair, a molded plastic affair in mustard yellow, next to the motel bed, in the dead time between showers and sleep, with nothing to do but indoctrinate herself into her new life. She could not leave until it was done. She wrote it all out on the piece of spiral notebook paper. Her age: twenty-two. Birthplace: Hawthorne, California. Name: Caroline. Hawthorne was just another suburban town in California, which you could bet was more like all the other suburban towns in California than it was different, and it would do just fine even if her favorite band was also from Hawthorne. And Caroline is a pretty girl’s name that also happened to be the name of the girl in one of her favorite songs. (Okay, there was no point in being witty about any of this, encoding it or making it coherent in any way, except if it helped her remember. But as Bobby had warned her, if it is legible to you, then it gives you away. But everything, of course, means something. However hermetic and obscure, it can’t fail to signify, can it? Unless, of course, she wanted it somehow, however quietly, to be legible and coherent. Unless, of course, she wanted someone, at some time, to figure it out.)

Caroline. Caroline Sherman. Okay?

That first night, Caroline didn’t know where Bobby had gone. Or when she would see him again. She knew only to get across state lines as soon as possible. Only then could she pause, anonymous in the great expanse of states between the two coasts, and hole up in a motel room composing her new life. They had agreed on Oregon as her final destination because she wanted to be back on the West Coast. Bobby said he would contact her eventually. Go to Eugene, he said, and when and if things are cool I’ll get in touch. I’ll find you. Otherwise they had determined a fail-safe plan to meet at a designated spot at the end of next year. But surely they would see each other before then. He’d get in touch when and if things cooled down.

And if, he said.

She fell asleep those first few nights committing the facts of her new identity to memory. And for a while it would be impossible not to be confused and self-conscious during even the most mundane exchanges. Do you drink coffee? And she would have to think, Well, I always have, but now, well, maybe I don’t. And she would reply, No, I never touch the stuff. And the extra step of comparing the present with the past would keep her in a constant state of reaction. Until it stopped, later and slowly—but she didn’t know about that yet, couldn’t even imagine it. Yet one day she would have lived her new life so long that the conjuring of the old life would seem like a dream, an act of imagination. Eventually it would almost feel as though it had never happened. This was the way it was supposed to go down. A secret held so long that even you no longer believe it isn’t really you. But at this point she had no idea that this could go on indefinitely. She had no idea she would find that her identity was more habit and will than anything more intrinsic.

She had all her supplies. She pulled them one by one out of a brown knapsack and placed them on the bedspread. Blond hair dye. L’Oréal Ash and Sass. Scissors. Cash. About four hundred dollars, all in twenties. This was her whole life, the sum of her past twenty-two years and the path into her future. A spiral notebook, blond hair, scissors, a handful of twenties, a pair of jeans, a black sweater, an oversized T-shirt, a bathrobe and a blue blouse. Three pairs of underwear, three pairs of socks, one pair of brown clogs. Silver earrings, antique, that Bobby gave her on their one-year anniversary. His grandmother’s. A watch her parents gave her for high school graduation—a quartz Timex, a Lady Sport model with a khaki-colored canvas band. She should discard these, but she couldn’t. She had already discarded her phone book. She did that the night before, ripping her name off the front and burying it as deeply as possible in the big garbage bins outside the train station, pushing different pages through each swinging lid as discreetly as she could manage in the state she was in. Right before that she stood in the ladies’ room, feeling ill, looking one last time at the phone numbers and addresses of her parents and her few friends. She knew by heart all she needed anyway, still did. That was the first time that expression made sense, by heart. Memorization and memory that was not intellectual or by rote but by heart.

When Bobby and Mary first discussed the day they might have to go underground, it had actually sounded exciting. She could admit that. In case of emergency, you must do the following. The escape plan. Change name, hair color, clothes. Social Security number. Remember the first numbers must match where you say you are from. Don’t count on any luck. Count on bad luck. He made her go over all of it. She didn’t really understand then that if it happened (and yet they knew it would happen, didn’t they?), if all went well, all according to the plan, it would happen in silence and isolation. Unnoticed and unobserved. She would end up alone in an anonymous room somewhere with a pocked chenille bedspread and a watercolor landscape print in the same hues of mustard and green that were everywhere in the room and with only the TV on the broken swivel stand to remind her of the world at large.

By the second night, she had her new identity worked out. She then needed to determine what should happen next—not just how to evade detection but how to survive, to sustain herself for however long it would last. (She didn’t, at that point, define what it really was. She projected a few months into the future and then stopped.) Caroline, a.k.a. Freya, a.k.a. Mary, did not count on luck but took stock of her advantages. She could see only two: One, she was a woman. Two, she was plain.

She was not ugly, she was not pretty. But just that old-fashioned word, plain. If she left the room, or if you tried to recall her to others, or even yourself, the adjectives would be limited—not hard to come up with but hardly worth the bother. Thin, yes; neat, yes; hair much more light brown than red, which also made it hard to describe, not so much both-this-and-that as barely-this-and-barely-that; light, milky blue eyes and pinkish white body. Her skin tone gave off a peeled quality that left the line distinguishing lip from face indistinct, her pale eyebrows lost against the nearly same-colored forehead. Bobby once described her as looking like a heroine in a nineteenth-century novel. To her that meant sickly, bland looks that suggested small, prim virtues.

No. Bobby laughed. They would have said you have a noble physiognomy.

Right.

A pleasing countenance.

What does that mean, exactly?

Uh, a good personality? He laughed and tried to kiss her.

How sweet. She pulled away, frowning at him. He held her arm. She shrugged him off.

No, listen.

She didn’t look at him but examined the floor, lips pursed.

You are so lovely, he continued, his voice softer now. True, it isn’t a loud-volume effect; it is subtle but quite deadly, I assure you.

She turned a little toward him. He was staring at her so intently she looked back at the floor. She could feel herself flush.

You have a sort of—I don’t really know how to explain it—what you might call an undertow, if that makes any sense. The longer I’m with you, the more I want to be with you. It gets harder and harder to imagine leaving you behind. It’s not about enchantment or seduction or anything as light as that. It is more like being held captive. It’s powerful and uncomfortable and gets worse all the time. She couldn’t hear what he was saying. She just knew that her lover thought she was plain.

But as Caroline she could put these two irrefutable facts together, plain and woman. It meant she could move somewhere new and go to the store or apply for a job and people wouldn’t feel threatened or aroused. She knew she could go unnoticed. She could not recall her own face if she wasn’t staring in a mirror. This smeary obscurity that had caused her pain her whole life became an asset now, her anonymity her saving attribute. Her looks had finally found their perfect context as a fugitive. Born to it by being chronically forgettable. (Which was also part of how she got in this position in the first place. Walking slowly, half smile on her face, clutching an innocuous purse, or a package, or a suitcase. Would anyone bother to stop such a person?)

Caroline did possess other assets as well. She could cook. She had worked in her father’s restaurant her entire youth. She could walk into a kitchen with a nearly bare pantry and create chilis and pastas and stews. This made her eminently employable. Restaurants hired people off the books. No legitimate Social Security number required. No references. No one would suspect this bland, wan woman was anything but harmless and ordinary. Because, despite the circumstances that had brought her here, she knew herself finally to be harmless and ordinary.

By the third evening in the motel she didn’t feel nearly as fear-struck. She even had an hour or two of giddy confidence. She was almost ready. Almost.

She imagined in future years there would be time to go over the series of events that led to the one event that inevitably led to the motel room. It felt like that, a whoosh of history, the somersault of dialectic rather than the firm step of will. The weight of centuries of history counterlevered against what, one person’s action? Just in the planning they knew where it would lead. Contingencies are never really contingencies but blueprints. Probabilities became certainties. She knew she would comb over how she came to be involved with cells and plans and people who believed in the inevitable and absolute. Someday she would explain her intentions to someone, at least to herself. And the event, which she could not think about, not yet, the event that she could not even name, she referred to in her thoughts as then, or the thing, or it. But surely in years to come she would think about it, over and over again, especially the part where Mary became Freya became Caroline.

What else?

She brushed her teeth. She ate more peanut butter and bread. She wished for a joint but settled for a beer bought at the store across the street. She exited briefly the afternoon of the third day, wearing large sunglasses and a scarf. She trembled in the fluorescence of the convenience store and hurried to pick up some juice, some beer, the paper. The Lincoln Journal Star. Front page, lower left quarter, a picture of Bobby Desoto. Just pay and leave. She stumbled back across the highway to her mustard-colored motel room. She read as she walked.

She opened the paper to the inside report and felt the fear come crashing back, making her stumble. She started to cry—noisy, hiccuped sobs and gulps as she closed the door behind her, staring at the lines of type. She learned that the group had

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